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In earnest, identifying five essential 1981 Donruss baseball cards proved a tall order. Fortunately, it was not an impossible ...
For the last several years, Donruss baseball cards have been quite popular with collectors. Innovative borders, sharp photography, good player selection and some interesting specialty cards have ...
Can a baseball card set be so bad it's good? No, not really. But can it have a handful of cards that are outstanding, ...
If you collected baseball cards in the 1980s you definitely remember Donruss Diamond Kings, perhaps the first cards you ever pulled from packs worthy of the phrase, "Hang it in the Louvre!" ...
The first 26 cards in the set were Diamond Kings — another Donruss staple subset — and Skinner was card No. 27. It’s interesting to me that Skinner’s bWAR was exactly 0.0.
A visit to Dick Perez’s website led Evans down a rabbit hole. It turned out the man Evans only knew as the artist behind the iconic cards was the official artist of the Baseball Hall of Fame for more ...
In 1984, Donruss released what some collectors consider one of the greatest baseball card sets of all time. In addition to 26 Diamond Kings—a subset of cards depicting a star player from every ...
If you collected Donruss baseball cards, you might be pronouncing your childhood wrong. How do you pronounce the company responsible for Diamond Kings and watercolor portraits of Chris Sabo?
Why it’s here: You cannot think of Donruss baseball cards without thinking about that Rated Rookie logo, and if there’s any rookie who ever deserved to be rated, it’s the two-sport star who ...
This was the era when it wasn’t enough to just have the regular Fleer, Donruss, and Topps sets. There had to be Fleer Ultra and Topps Stadium Club and Leaf. ... I realized that I had about 100,000 ...
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